Alabama Women’s Fertility At Risk as Legislature Fails To Act
Only 25% of health freedom and vaccine-related bills have a realistic chance of passage this session
As the evidence continues to mount that the mRNA COVID “vaccines” have a deleterious effect on women’s fertility, a number of bills to protect Alabamians from these shots appear to be poised to die this session.
A recent study from the Czech Republic showed that vaccinated women had roughly 33% fewer successful pregnancies than unvaccinated women.
While several different mechanisms have been suggested for this drop in pregnancies, another study has just suggested a potentially catastrophic cause: the loss of over half of women’s eggs!
A paper by Karaman et. al. showed that in rats, the Pfizer mRNA COVID vaccine caused the destruction of >60% of primordial follicles—the cells that produce eggs. If this holds true for humans—and the Czech study, and others, suggests it may—the consequences for vaccinated women are staggering.
Since women are born with all the eggs they will ever have, losing this number of eggs has serious long-term implications for these women, their spouses, their families, and society as a whole.
With one legislative day remaining in the 2025 regular session, only two of eight vaccine- and health freedom-related bills have any realistic chance of passing the Legislature.
HB2, which would mandate that minors have written parental consent for vaccination, has passed the House and now awaits action by the Senate.
SB85, which broadens and simplifies the process for obtaining religious exemptions from vaccination and testing requirements for students in public K-12 schools and public institutions of higher education, has passed the Senate and House Health Committee and now awaits action by the House.
HB367, which would restrict the use of taxpayer monies for vaccine promotion, awaits action in the House State Government Committee. It would need to receive a favorable report from the House Committee, pass the House, pass through the appropriate Senate Committee, then be approved by the Senate in its present form. HB367’s chances seem remote.
The remaining five bills—HB316, HB444, HB503, HB519 and HB520—have all been awaiting action by the House Health Committee and its Chairman, State Representative Paul Lee (R-Dothan).
A bill that would label vaccine-containing foods as drugs. Bills that would make it easier to obtain religious exemptions for vaccination, and require schools to accept these exemptions. A bill that would remove the prejudice against the unvaccinated for organ transplants.
These bills will almost certainly die in the House Health Committee this session.
Supporters of these bills have told ALPolitics.com that they intend to continue to work with members of the Legislature to have them reintroduced in the 2026 session.
A more in-depth description of the bills discussed above is HERE.
For more information on the above studies, a general overview of the issue may be found HERE. The original articles are HERE and HERE.